wooty:I hope the ending to this saga is good, otherwise ill have to start up the "take back critical miss" movement, then boycott this comic, then threaten you with legal action, then make endless threads on why I dont like the ending.

Or I could just enjoy it and carry on with life.

Course Critical miss is free where as ME was 60 bucks for 3 installments + DLC not to mention I could sit down and read all of CM is less time then I have invested in a single play through of ME

Sandytimeman:actually it makes perfect sense why she did that. I know, for a life time of therapy. When someone calls you crazy and you are struggling with problems...it makes you mad, makes you feel like your less of a person than them.

Mental illness and trauma are not the victims fault but people still blame them anyway...and thats what mol is doing right now.

Also those meds generally have very harsh side effects, its usually just trying to feel more normal when you take them, rather then wanting to feel special. I've had some harsh side effects on those meds, severe depression, shakes, outbursts of uncontrollable anger, severe weight loss, and etc.

Especially when it feels like they're taunting you with it. Lashing out feels like the only thing you can do, so you do it. And afterwords, you feel like shit because you proved them right, which makes you feel like even less.

I'm with you two dudes. Pretty much was I was thinking, going from personal experience and all that (locked away in a psych ward for 2 1/2 weeks for something that didn't happen, and completely ostracized by my family because of it [didn't help that my mother was the one that put me there because her boyfriend wanted me out], among other things).

But then again, she dose think video game characters are talking to her.

And that's where the kicker comes in.

Loking at it from Mol's POV, Erin breaks into Clutch's house and is running around the room, howling and waving Clutch's 360 around. When confronted, she talks to her invisible friend Agent 47 (We've seen in previous comics that she does this out loud so they probably saw that), removes her pants and criticizes Mol's choice of boyfriends in front of said boyfriend. Then we find that, despite this sort of behavior, she refuses to take her meds. At this point, even without her ****-blocking Mol's Date Night (and Erin's possible role in a previous boyfriend leaving), I feel that Mol is more than justified in not tiptoeing around the issue at this point.

Oddly, Erin's reaction (Throwing the 360) reminds me of what happened on Firefly when River slashed Jayne's chest. You can be sympathetic to River and what she's going through while still agreeing with Jayne when he said "What happens next time she goes on a stabbing spree?"

Otaku World Order:Not just colours but patterns too. I'd like to see Arcade Gamer Fubuki's magic panties do that.

Ah, I have been ninjaed, even in this.

For those of you wondering why the color changing underwear, I think it's a reference to this post made about the previous strip:

malignzeitgeist:I know this is trying to be a tame bit of wish-fulfillment and this is just a small gripe. But can we get more interesting types of underwear on the girls? I mean, understandably this is not the main focus of the strip but it just seems odd that Mol, who was about to be having some fun times would be wearing plain ol' white tighty-whities.

Notice the "Who says we don't listen to criticism?" comment at the bottom of this comic. When I read that, I just had to investigate.

erttheking:Am I the only one that is thinking that this is steadily coming down with Cerberus Syndrom?

Gradually? Man, this thing came down with a full blown case at the start of the car crash arc. (Seriously, I really enjoyed the comic when it was about the office of a gaming website. The car crash storyline was mildly offensive. The current storyline, while somewhat entertaining, definitely feels like a completely different comic than we started with.)

You seem to be trying to appeal to a broader audience with all these different pants.

Sell outs.

I stopped liking it once you heard about it. Too mainstream

Both of you are a couple-a newfags.

I liked this comic when it was just a thought [don't ask how I knew about it, I use a method to keep up with artistic ideas that you probably never heard of]. Critical Miss took a turn for the worse once they started drawing it out. It sucks now that it's an actual webcomic. Fucking sellouts....

My 360 went down a flight of stairs in my dads old apartment building, as long as the hard drive is in a single piece you can recover it. Now if the disk was inside the Xbox you got a whole different problem D:

Vanguard1219:... well, this comic strip started to get dark really fucking fast...

Agreed. But I´m not against it. In fact, I kinda dig it. I´ve always been a big fan the idea of making whacky characters talk about serious stuff inbetween the whacky bits. It makes the characters feel less like Snarky Mcsnarksnark and more like actual people with problems and emotions who just happend to snark a whole lot.